Monthly Archives: February 2022

BOOK EXTRACT & VIDEO: Expensive Poverty: Why Aid Fails and How It Can Work – Daily Maverick

Posted: February 17, 2022 at 8:14 am

Outsiders need to get insiders to do their jobs better. This is the key lesson from years of aid to Africa, from which the continent has little to show. Most of the aid given has been consumed, some by the donors themselves, much of it by local governments and elites. While it may have made things less bad, it has not proven the development panacea that Western leaders, among many, once hoped.

INTRODUCTION

THE DILEMMAS OF AID

Donors have poured $1.2-trillion of development assistance into the continent in the 30 years since the end of the Cold War, a figure that could conceivably be doubled if it included unofficial charitable giving. While one might justifiably discount the value of aid before 1990, given the strategic and ideological rather than primarily developmental purpose of a Cold War rationale, since then, however, this excuse has waned. As such, the development opportunity cost and wastage are staggering.

This $1.2-trillion alone could have provided 682,000 kilometres of new, two-lane, all-weather highway. Sub-Saharan Africa has an estimated 2.8 million kilometres of road network currently, only 800,000 kilometres of which are paved. Of this, 50% is deemed to be in good condition. As an indicator of the impact of such a network, China has built 150,000 kilometres of modern multilane highway since 1980, thereby enhancing the competitiveness of Chinese businesses by reducing transport costs and travel times. The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has, by comparison, just 2,500 kilometres of paved roads for a territory one-quarter of the size of China.

This money, spent wisely over these 30 years, could have created extraordinary wealth. Even one-quarter of the $40-billion spent annually on average could have provided one million university scholarships every year, representing an enormous talent pool that could be working for the continents benefit.

The $1.2-trillion could have repaved 5.5 million kilometres of African roads or revitalised the continents rail network. If we use the cost of the Ethiopian standard gauge railway as a contemporary benchmark, the same money could have bought over 200,000 kilometres of brand-new rail-line, along with rolling stock and engines. Africa currently has 68,880 kilometres of operational rail-line, less than 20% of which is standard gauge and the remainder the narrower, lower-speed and freight Cape gauge. Also, some 171 new, modern, fully equipped commercial seaports could have been constructed, or 160,000 state-of-the-art, one-stop border posts.

Currently, Africa produces 168,000 megawatts of electricity, of which over one-quarter is produced by one country, South Africa. The last 30 years of aid expenditure could have built 240 top-of-the-range, 1,000-megawatt generation plants.

Why have decades of spending had such a small impact on improving the lives of the poor?

The average per capita income of sub-Saharan Africans changed by just $352 during these 30 years, from $1,304 in 1990 (when there was a population of 500 million) to $1,656 in 2019 (1.1 billion). Donors have spent $1,111 per person over 30 years to lift the incomes of Africans by $352.

And Africas share of global income has been falling steadily since the mid-2000s. The world is getting richer at a faster rate than Africans.

As a result, prominent Africans condemn the notion of development through aid. Aid has been more of a disincentive to development in mostcases, says Olusegun Obasanjo, the former Nigerian president. No wonder people in developing countries are asking for trade and investment rather than aid. There will always be room for humanitarian assistance in cases of human and natural disasters and emergencies. But foreign aid as an instrument of development must be accepted as tried and failed.

Donors likewise have continuously scrutinised aid effectiveness. In November 2020, the British government announced its intention to deviate from its obligation to spend 0.7% of gross national income (GNI) on aid. An Integrated Review of Security, Defence, Development and Foreign Policy, conducted in 2020/2021, led to the merger of the United Kingdoms Department for International Development and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office into the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. France, meanwhile, established a Fund for Innovation in Development in 2021 to test and scale-up policy solutions to poverty and inequality in an attempt to transform the countrys approach to aid, most of which will go to projects in sub-Saharan Africa.

These are among the latest in a long line of attempts to improve aid inputs and outcomes.

Still, despite terrific needs and poverty, aid is consumed with little evidence of sustained development progress, in part because it is given to countries that do not possess the capacity to use it properly and develop in the first instance.

It is funnelled into a governance environment from where as much as $90-billion almost half of the annual funding gap necessary to achieve the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals is illicitly externalised every year. From 2000 to 2015, illicit capital flight from Africa totalled $836-billion, involving practices such as misinvoicing, along with corruption and theft.

Politics and economic choices matter. Aid cannot be separated from the wider political and economic context into which it is given.

There are other problems with the giving of aid, which this book examines, including the belief that it is primarily a technocratic function, that the politics matters less than the technical solutions, and that success demands a focus on state capacity. This may be entirely explicable given that official development assistance (ODA) is given by governments, although their intentions may be altruistic. By ignoring the importance of the individual over the state, this approach encourages the unchecked power of the state. As William Easterly notes, the technical problems of the poor (and the absence of technical solutions for those problems) are a symptom of poverty, not a cause of poverty. Yet, remarkably, the evidence from Western donors, in particular, is how well improvements in individual freedom have worked historically for development, and how governance goes hand in hand with liberty, equality, values and rights. Democratic competition is a powerful force for positive change in getting the basic ideas and principles right.

Strategy in this respect encompasses more than just tactical and technical capacity. It is an undertaking based on principles, values and rules, demanding a systematic approach that includes all the attributes and sources of state power: of people, institutions and processes. Success requires a combination of all these factors. There is a need to understand the local dynamics and political balances. In Afghanistan, for example, while the premise of military intervention may have been correct in order to buy time for the Afghan government to establish itself, Western leadership did not understand the place and the impact of outsiders on a delicate social and political equilibrium.

Put differently, while battles can be won through superior military capabilities and technology, wars including a war on poverty will have to be won by the application of political and economic resources rather than simply technical interventions.

This challenge of government in development should not be surprising given Africas history, where private sector growth has largely been anathema, and not just in the colonial era. As I argued in Africas Third Liberation, written with Jeffrey Herbst, the colonialists established interventionist states that actively prevented indigenous African economic enrichment, while protecting white settlers, colonial companies and monopoly capital. The combination of racism, the imperative of control and vested interests prevented Western actors from seeing an alternative to state-led economic activity as possible, one based largely on individual rights and initiative. After independence, the African successors to colonial rule were comfortable with the economic systems they inherited once stripped of racism, especially as state intervention offered many patronage opportunities. Expanding state control and intervention was one of the few levers open to them in the context of overall state weakness.

This absence of options was exaggerated by the failure of the liberators, as Morgan Tsvangirai, then Zimbabwes prime minister, lamented, to have a plan beyond redistribution and no focus on production and an environment where politics has been about personality cults, not policies. East Asian countries, by comparison, benefited from commitment by their leadership to popular welfare, to do the right thing for their people, a goodness of will that could more easily be consolidated and accelerated by outsiders than in those situations, including in Africa, where the compulsion for control forestalled the forces for economic change.

But this is not a book principally about the failings of aid. That would be too easy to write. It is rather one that examines how, with the assistance of external actors, Africa can find its way out of poverty.

This book argues that, since poverty is largely a choice made by leaders, the strengthening of individual economic and political rights and discourse is at the core of sustainable solutions to ending poverty, not simply improving the delivery of technical assistance. It contends that people, not the state, are the critical thread linking donors and development, enabling public and private sector solutions. It does not, however, claim that aid is a principal reason for African failure, even though it may have distortive effects and deliver less than promised. That argument is akin to saying: here is some money, so you are poor.

The book accepts that there are enormous problems in trying to instil terms of growth and stability from outside. As the former British aid minister Rory Stewart has argued, We have been trying to do this in northern Britain since the 1930s. It is very hard to do this in countries with a proper domestic environment and of course much more so in tricky, poor countries. It argues that there is a need for donors, as a key first principle, to not harm, a criterion that is not always upheld in external dealings with the continent, where they are shaped less by the needs of Africans than those of donors themselves.

It acknowledges that there are successes. The US Presidents Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (Pepfar) initiative is one example of how things can change for the better if the right amount of strategic thinking, political will and management are present. Launched in 2003, by 2020 Pepfar had provided more than $85-billion in cumulative funding for HIV/AIDS treatment, prevention and research, and distributed antiretroviral medicine to more than 13 million Africans across 50 countries, saving an estimated 18 million lives in the process.

This book also recognises that there are different types of aid, that spending on a variety of humanitarian and other emergencies, along with military and peacekeeping assistance, has different goals from improving growth and development outcomes. It recognises the dilemma in aid-giving, the realisation that funding humanitarian causes, for example, can undermine governance in the longer term while saving lives immediately, and that support for democracy, like education, can compete with other pressing needs and clash with competing national interests. There is also the dilemma of support, as will be seen, for certain authoritarian regimes in the interests of (at least) short-term stability and recovery.

Thus, it is much more difficult to write a book on aid that outlines ways to spend money better. It is more popular populist, even to point out the folly and abuse of aid or to talk in generalities about strengthening governance and the capacity of the state.

Finally, while a huge sum has been spent on aid, it is also a relatively small amount, given the scale of Africas fast-changing needs. The need to reform traditional approaches to development is heightened by the pace of change in Africa, particularly in the delinquent way in which many of the continents governments manage their economies and the slow pace of job creation for young people. Such a business-as-usual approach is likely to end in disaster, given the scale of Africas demographic pressures and the presence of so many social fault lines.

The scale of the challenge

Two significant and frequently unheralded shifts followed the end of the Cold War: from a state- to a market-based economic system, and from authoritarian to democratic systems of government. Freedom House is an independent research and advocacy organisation dedicated to promotingdemocracy, political rights and civil liberties since its founding in 1941. It charts an increase in the number of African democracies from just two to over 10 between the 1980s and the 2000s. During this time, Africa enjoyed a sustained period of economic growth not seen since the heady immediate post-independence days of the 1960s.

In the next 30 years from now, the same amount of time since the Berlin Wall fell, Africa will undergo a seismic demographic change the continent is projected to double its population to 2.5 billion people by 2050. This has staggering implications. The numbers are startling. At current rates, Nigerias population will increase to over 400 million, while Tanzanias, currently 53 million, will grow to the same size as that of Russia at 137 million. Kenyas will more than double to 95 million, while Ugandas will balloon from 43 million to 106 million, according to the United Nations. Even before Covid-19 hit, the liberal economic and political transition in Africa had regressed somewhat.

African economic growth had slowed from its 21st-century peak of 9.2% in 2006 to -1.4% in 2018. By this time, the continent had become the site of the majority of the worlds poor, with one in three Africans 422 million people living below the global poverty line. At the same time, the number of African democracies fell to just eight in 2020, with the number of countries classified by Freedom House as partly free at 25. This occurred despite clear evidence linking economic outcomes to the quality of democracy in the continents 55 states, as will be seen in Chapter 7, and despite the preference of more than two-thirds of Africans routinely polled for a democratic system. While there might be democracy fatigue in parts of the developed world, especially among young people, given the apparent failures of the political system to deal with complex problems, Africa does not share the same lack of enthusiasm.

This preference is not surprising. No governance accountability framework remains more viable than democracy and its attributes of a free press, freedom of speech, competition, and parliamentary oversight, along with institutional checks and balances. Yet, by 2020, less than 10% of people in sub-Saharan Africa lived in free countries. Donors have been complicit in its sub-optimal performance, whether by design or neglect.

Such a combination of government and development has consequences. Africas youth are, for instance, disproportionately disadvantaged and economically marginalised, accounting for 60% of all the continents jobless, their rate of unemployment averaging more than double the adult proportion, according to the African Development Bank. As the Arab Spring reminds us, there are wider implications than just desperate images and frustrated social media posts. The World Bank shows that about 40% of those who join rebel movements are motivated by a lack of employment. With 200 million people aged between 15 and 24, Africa has the largest population of young people in the world. Without radical improvement to how Africas economies and politics are run, social and political catastrophe looms. The costs of failing to do so are immeasurable.

Migration is a particularly powerful symbol of inequality. It also perfectly illustrates the political economy that both gives rise to and sustains this flow. By the middle of 2020, for example, 24,000 refugees were stuck on Greeces Aegean islands of Samos, Chios, Leros, Kos and Lesvos, plus another 90,000 on the Greek mainland seeking a way into Europe, many sleeping rough around Athens Victoria Square, before heading for Greeces northern borders and the richer pickings of Germany and Scandinavia. Athens abandoned retail spaces had been transformed into non-governmental organisation (NGO) offices around the square, offering support services from legal representation to counselling.

The presence of so many refugees represents both failure and opportunity and not always the sort that politicians and NGOs want to be reminded of. There is much at stake in improving the giving of aid, especially on the African continent.

Aiding or abetting?

The problem with aid is that it is incomplete. It lacks an overarching political and economic rationale a strategic policy framework. Rather than looking at ways of changing behaviour in a manner that assists reforms and greater competitiveness, it tends towards selecting technical and tactical responses. As a result, aid has undermined the value of international assistance and relationships and undersold itself as a tool for development. The cost of the absence of a strategic framework is shown when donor political interests trump on-the-ground realities, thrusting the donors into a political choice that they invariably get wrong since it is made largely for short-term reasons of expediency over a principled partnership.

Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu was born just four years before President Yoweri Museveni and his National Resistance Movement came to power in Uganda in 1986. Known by his stage name, Bobi Wine, the reggae artist has produced more than 70 songs in a 15-year artistic career. Since 2017, he has also served as a member of parliament, representing the Kyadondo East constituency. He says Museveni clings to power as this was his agenda all along in milking dry the nation. Wine argues that Museveni has kept people poor so that their preoccupation is to find a daily meal and not to question why their lives are not getting better.

The singer has been constantly harassed, beaten up and arrested by the authorities. During the run-up to the January 2021 election, he was illegally detained, tortured and abducted by security forces. Clearly, Wine rattled the Ugandan authorities, who apparently viewed him as a threat to Museveni (born in 1944) on account of Wines popularity among the youth.

Uganda is one of the youngest countries in the world, with a median age of 15.9 years, the population nearly doubling since the turn of the century. Nearly half its 45 million people are 14 or under, while just 2% are aged over 65. About 700,000 young people reach working age every year a figure set to rise to one million by 2030 but only 75,000 new jobs are created for them. Wine has frequently called on Museveni to retire, saying youngpeople must prepare to take over leadership of the East African nation. Given the extent of foreign funding for the regime, Wine asks of the donor community, and of the United States in particular: Why do you fund our oppressor? Even at the height of the most egregious anti-democratic behaviour in the run-up to the January 2021 election, the international flow of funds to Musevenis regime continued. In 2020, for example, Uganda received $2-billion in aid, including $432-million from the US, while ranking eleventh on the UKs list of top aid recipients, receiving over 150-million. To these contributions have to be added Ugandas cut from the flow of regional humanitarian assistance, estimated at $348-million in 2017, along with the substantial income and diverted expenditure from the efforts of Ugandan peacekeeping troops in Somalia.

In essence, aid cannot be divorced from political considerations. This point resonates across Africa, as donors attempt to manage the tension between regime and human security between supporting those in power and those citizens disempowered while at the same time maintaining a balancing act between national interests and human rights concerns.

The donors, says Wine, should be honest and true to the values that they represent, values of human dignity, values of democracy and values of the rule of law, or else they would be partners in crime. And, secondly, they should be relating with the nation, and not with an individual. The people of Uganda are represented by their Constitution, and by their laws. He adds, They should not do things just to maintain Musevenis rule his grip on power. They should be doing things to maintain relations between their nations and our nation.

Wine argues: Our [Ugandan] military has been so funded by the United States, and yet it has been key in abusing the rights of citizens of Uganda. We want them to hold the administration in Kampala accountable. We want them to put the rule of law and respect for human rights as a precondition for cooperation.

This is a fair point, especially given the history of aid to Africa. There are tensions between the national interest, in respect of security and business, for instance, and aid as a force for good. These have to be constantly managed, not ignored.

Ugandas strategic situation explains the tensions in the relationship between donor and recipient. While the ruling party might not align with the West on democracy, this is excused by Ugandas role in South Sudan and Somalia, the role played by Uganda regionally in hosting 1.4 million refugees (the fourth-largest population worldwide after Turkey, Colombia and Pakistan), and, probably, the intelligence-sharing between Kampala and the West. At the same time, it has been in the Wests strategic interest to keep Wine and other opposition figures operating, probably cynically to keep the pretence of democracy alive, and certainly to prevent the implosion of Uganda if something was to happen to them. Similarly, Museveni has sold himself as the man standing between order and chaos in the region, the chaos that he has no small part in fomenting himself: he is adept, like warlords and mobsters elsewhere, at creating his own demand. Essentially, the War on Terror has let Museveni and others off the hook, their wiggle room widened by the advent of different donors. And yet, the leverage of aid has not been put to any obvious good on human rights. Donors have sat largely marginalised on the sidelines despite the flows of assistance.

Other country examples illustrate a similar tension between favouring short-term stability and interests over the type of democracy that produces long-term results. In the DRC, the international community preferred recognising the government of Flix Tshisekedi, which came to power in 2019 after a deal with the incumbent, Joseph Kabila, on the grounds that the country would otherwise be thrown into bloody tumult. The cost of such a circuitous, negotiated route to State House is inevitably a lack of legitimacy and credibility, making the administrations already difficult task of national consolidation and development virtually impossible. Such carelessness is evident in the financial straits in which Kinshasa continuously finds itself. It is not a decision that outsiders should be making effectively on behalf of the Congolese, no matter the justification. As Freddy Matungulu, the former Congolese finance minister, remarks, Governance has been horrible for the last 10 years and now we have to repay [loans] when we have not built capacity for debt service obligations. The lesson for donors is that the concern for stability should not become the driving force behind the provision of aid.

Such a tension between external interests and internal preferences is nothing new. During the Cold War, aid was routinely given to one superpower proxy regardless of its governance or human rights record, and only because of its support for that particular superpower. The most (in)famous of these recipients was undoubtedly Mobutu Sese Seko, who took some $12-billion off Western donors over his 32 years in power, in spite of (or perhaps because of) the fact that he had come to power via a coup, and had an abysmal human rights record. What was more important than Mobutus governance record was his loyalty. Under the terms of the War on Terror, loyalty and utility in the struggle have been at least as important a quality as human rights and the democratic condition, perhaps more so.

Another donor-recipient tension surrounds the nature of the international community itself, which is increasingly diverse and no longer governed by state-to-state interactions. In Africa, this community, such as it exists, is no longer centred around the financial activities of the West. Rather, it is a much more complex and less cohesive configuration than before. Turkey, Brazil, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), China, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Iran and Russia, among others, are all players. China, especially, has proven highly transactional in its dealings, and this requires Africa to appreciate the line between risk and reward inherent in the relationship.

In 2019, ODA by the 30-member countries of the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) totalled $152.8 billion, representing 0.3% of their combined national income. Nearly 98% of this total flowed in theform of grants, loans to sovereign entities and contributions to multilateral institutions, the remainder to private sector instruments and companies and in the form of debt relief. This was an increase of 1.4% compared to 2018. In addition, non-DAC member countries contributed a further estimated $20-billion, foremost among them China ($2.4-billion), Turkey ($8.8-billion), the UAE ($2.3-billion) and Saudi Arabia ($4.5-billion).

As will be seen in Chapter 1, to this amount can be added an even larger chunk of private aid spending, inflating the total amount of annual charity to over $500-billion.

For outsiders, there is a tension between the need for strong local leaders, of the sort that get things done, and strong institutions. Similarly, there is widespread recognition of the imperative for local ownership and the realisation that not all local ownership is good as violent events in South Sudan after its 2011 secession illustrate. Letting the locals do their thing, and fail, is hard to allow when the humanitarian bill is picked up elsewhere.

Aid continually stumbles on the translation of rhetoric into roll-out in turning visions and plans into actual projects and development. As a result, many good intentions never see the light of day, and aid is simply consumed with little tangible effect. Sound political leadership is at a premium in separating good intentions from actual results.

Ultimately, countries will not be rebuilt by donors but by locals, even if this takes hundreds of years. Can donors speed this up by avoiding their worst excesses, taking heed of their massive moral blind spots, and promoting the very means that have enabled their own countries and peoples to prosper? Can they take advantage of the global economy and Africas attractiveness as a growth frontier?

Whatever the challenges of translating aid into development of ensuring the conducive combination of people, institutions and systems African countries have more options today than in the past, despite the constraints of their changing demographic circumstances.

Todays differences with the past

The restaurant on the 16th floor of the Corinthia Hotel in Khartoum affords an incredible view of the spot where the White Nile and the Blue Nile converge. The White Nile flows from the Great Lakes of equatorial Africa, with the shorter Blue Nile, the remotest source of which is the Felege Ghion spring in the Ethiopian Highlands, contributing nearly 90% of the water carried overall by the Nile. The slow, sweeping waters through Khartoum contrast with the darting traffic at its edges; both the passage of the river and the countrys history are marked by a series of bridges from the bascule Blue Nile Road and Railway Bridge completed by the Cleveland Bridge & Engineering Company in 1909, to the modern Tuti suspension bridge opposite the hotel.

It is no coincidence that the locals translate Khartoum as the hose or elephants trunk. It may be blessed with an extraordinary water resource in the two Niles, but, in less positive ways, Sudan reflects Africas internal traits and external tendencies. With the country lying at the intersection of regional interests and geopolitical ambition, the inadequate development responses of various governments, more careless than careful, demonstrate the extent of the disconnect between elite practices and popular welfare.

The largest country by landmass in Africa until the 2011 secession of South Sudan, Sudan seems, to borrow adjectives used by The Economist in cover stories on Africa a decade apart, to be simultaneously rising and hopeless. Its natural resources and the strength of its civil society, which helped to eject long-time President Omar Hassan al-Bashir unceremoniously from office in 2019, are powerful positives. Its weaknesses lie in its insipid institutions, thin layers of expertise, self-interested external relationships, and extractive elite practices, which have seen the country squander its agricultural wealth and oil bonanza in a costly combination of war and corruption.

This did not take place in isolation. For decades, the world has engaged and interfered, pouring in aid and humanitarian resources and helping develop plans to change the regime and turn Sudan around. Why these efforts have so far failed to move the needle in Sudan and almost everywhere else in Africa is the subject of this book.

Still, todays policy environment enjoys many advantages over the past, regardless of wistful rearward glances at the Cold War years and their scope for ideological experimentation and rhetorical gaslighting.

While nearly half of Americans may see globalisation as responsible for destroying their lives, the faster and deeper global flows of people, goods and money have transformed the lives of a generation of global citizens. Globalisation might have threatened the American dream for the industrial workers of the Midwest. Still, it has been the force behind realising an Asian dream of rising incomes, improved living standards and expanded opportunities over several generations.

This transformation has been driven by a commitment of East Asias leaders to popular welfare, no matter the political system. It reminds us, too, that the states legitimacy rests on what Ashraf Ghani, the former president of Afghanistan, describes as the judgment of its people on the delivery of basic services and infrastructure. The modern era has redefined sovereignty away from its traditional preoccupations with security and defence, towards state efficiency, global connectivity and national competitiveness. The results of this (re)engagement with globalisation have been stupendous. In 1990, Chinas average per capita income was just $729; within 30 years, this had increased (in real, constant terms) more than tenfold to

$8,254, and its poverty level had fallen from 66% (of 1.1 billion people) to an astonishing 0.5% (of 1.4 billion people). Such growth has lifted more than a billion people from poverty in a single generation.

Can globalisation offer an African dream along the lines of that of East Asia?

As will be seen here, lessons learned in Africa remind us that, however imperfect democracy may be, there is no sustainable way of addressing poverty and inequality without a liberal democratic system: one that offers the prospect of a leadership change if the ideas and management of existing leaders prove not up to the task. Even so, no humanitarian or security or development challenge is ever going to be solved by simply staring at it. If we are to live without disturbing and possibly life-threatening insecurity, the world must become a more liberal place, ensuring that the poor and dispossessed gain a greater share of resources. This is especially true as Africas challenges multiply, with rapid population and urban growth, seemingly faster than the continent is able to offer solutions.

At one level, it will demand continued generosity. From those to whom much is given, reminds Mary Gates, mother of Bill, much is expected.

At another level, accelerating development will require improving policy and governance structures to ensure that money is well spent. It will also necessitate reforming legal and tax structures that facilitate inequality through fiscal dysfunction.

International aid is, however, much more limited as a development tool than some imagine. In no country in Africa does development spending amount to more than 5% of the economy, notes Erik Solheim, a former Norwegian development minister and United Nations under-secretary-general, and in none does that of the UN amount to more than 1%. So why do we tell people, he asks, that the UN is bringing development to the world, when 98.5% of the costs of education in developing countries is financed by taxpayers or mothers and fathers or relatives? Development is all about business, not about aid, as the development success of East Asia reminds us. Yet, Africa has proven a notable laggard in gaining a reasonable slice of the average annual $1.5-trillion global pie of foreign direct investment.

This suggests that better ways should be found to use aid as an enabling tool for entrepreneurship and that jobs should be created to reduce inequality and the social and political disquiet. There remains no other sustainable way, despite the attraction of rhetorical commitments to redistribution and even though capitalism contains plenty of hard edges.

The massive increase in wealth in Asia, and in China and India in particular, has reduced the difference in average incomes between regions, although it remains high for some. A recent UN study, for example, shows the average income in North America is 16 times higher than that of people in sub-Saharan Africa. But it is the extent of inequality within countries, particularly in Africa, that stands out. Of the 49 countries worldwide that recorded increased levels of inequality between 1990 and 2016, 13 were African. Ten of the 19 most unequal countries worldwide are in sub-Saharan Africa namely, South Africa, Namibia, Botswana, Zambia, the Central African Republic, the Comoros, Lesotho, Swaziland, Rwanda and Kenya.

Inequality can have a deleterious effect on reform and on democracy. The elites in highly unequal societies are disposed to protect a political and policy environment that favours their interests and reinforces their social and economic position.

Such disincentives for reform can threaten social stability. It is a wonder that the super-poor are not angrier with the super-rich and the circumstances perpetuating inequality of opportunity. The examples are all around us: the poor farmers in the village of Mankohokwe in Malawi, one hour north of the capital Lilongwe, who scuffle in the dust for maize pips, unable to afford livestock, the $40 to buy a bicycle or the $40 per term required to send their children to a state secondary school. Or the 100,000 who live in appallingly unhealthy conditions where malaria and typhoid are rife in the stilt houses of the Makoko community on the edge of Lagos Lagoon, a community long a centrepiece of Western poverty porn. The water is petrol black, full of faeces and much else. On the other side of Africa, examples also abound in the sweating mkokoteni pulling and pushing their barrows laden with vegetables, fruit and household commodities across Mombasas four-lane Nyali Bridge. The traffic weaves dangerously past them and the sidewalks where hawkers offer 10-shilling (US 10 cent) bags of peanuts, sliced pineapples, bananas and second-hand clothes. The same goes for the endless lines of people and bicycles traipsing along the roads of Burundi, carrying everything from women side-saddle, water, corrugated iron, wood, clumps of bananas, animal feed, beds and other furniture, bundles of thatch and building material.

The free market offers a ladder of development and progress that has brought more than a billion people out of poverty in the last quarter-century, an extraordinary and unprecedented accomplishment. Still, it is a system with hard edges and tough knocks, which leaves some behind, their fortunes often determined by lifes great lottery the circumstances into which they are born. It behoves us to do more to offer a hand-up to those left behind and a softer landing for those who have fallen down. For while capitalisms cream invariably rises, sometimes this is accomplished through less than transparent structures.

The success of aid as a tool for development depends not only on what is done, but how it is done and by whom. Local ownership is the most critical element of success, itself a product of politics and leadership. Just as power is never purely technocratic but rather about collaborative relationships, development depends on the ability of diverse interests to work together for a common goal.

As will be noted throughout this volume, there is certainly no shortage of good causes to be funded by outsiders. But there are dangers in targeting inputs as the solution, not least since when this becomes the dominant measure, less attention is invariably focused on where and how well money is spent and the outputs achieved. David Cameron made the 0.7% aid target a centrepiece of his time as British prime minister, and it was written into the Conservative Partys 2010 manifesto and later enshrined in law. Seen as a symbol of a compassionate foreign policy, the target was achieved in 2013 when expenditure reached 11.4-billion. Perhaps more than anything, this overriding focus showed how little his premiership achieved and how much it centred on public relations spin.

Politics lies behind problems of ownership and responsibility, authority and implementation. It explains why commitments to arbitrary aid expenditure benchmarks, such as that of 0.7% of GNI, are made, even though they are obviously not the answer. It is why donors grant funds directly to projects, even though they know that government budget support is the best way to build capacity and ownership. It explains, too, why donors go completely off the deep end in pursuing schemes like the Millennium Villages Project, which they know instinctively will not work but do so anyway because the people promoting them are politically influential in the donor nations at the intersection of Hollywood and Harvard (or Columbia in this case). And the need to justify the levels of expenditure and foreign policy focus is why the world loves spending on poverty alleviation targets, including the UN Millennium Development Goals and subsequent Sustainable Development Goals. While such objectives are positive in signalling an ambitious and collective agenda, they are largely top-down, technical, state-centric and bureaucratic rather than bottom-up, people-centred and organic, as they should be.

There are changes, too, in this international order, which have brought greater scope in funding and policy experimentation that so far may have helped elites more than citizens. The confrontation between China and the US has given African leaders an alternative to Western systems and conditions, as in the Cold War. As democracy has slipped backwards, encouraged no doubt in instances by the prospect of the Beijing model, the Russians and the Chinese, among others, have been happy to fill the vacuum left by the West. Their aid giving appears to be less about local development, however, or even a win-win bargain, as the Chinese government prefers to profess, than one underpinned by a mercantilist transactionalism: a focus on the immediate profit of the deal without much thought to the other partner or the longer-term relationship.

A pernicious political economy can drive aid transfers in a way that has its own logic, one less to do with solving development problems than feeding a system in both the donor and recipient nations. Getting this right is thus a challenge for both developed and developing nations.

The political economy of change

This book centres on the association between politics and economics and the policy choices that exist in the interplay between these two disciplines, summed up by the term political economy essentially the relationship between business and governance. Development is a profoundly political process, which demands an understanding of why certain policy choices are made (or not); essentially, who gets what, when and how (the core questions in the discipline of politics) in the context of scarcity (the key question in the discipline of economics). While acknowledging the existence of different frameworks for analysis in political economy notably mercantilism or economic nationalism, liberalism and Marxism this volume is less concerned with a critique of the international system per se, than working out the best ways for states to prosper within this structure. The key reform challenge in Africa centres on the political economy of change: turning the system away from what the former Nigerian minister and vice-president of the World Bank, Oby Ezekwesili, has described as the fundamental structural problem for Africa: the corrupted political class has no incentive to correct [the system of governance]. They own it, and it works for them as it is. For example, if the explanation for the growth of East Asia resides largely in policy changes, the failure of Africa to develop at comparative rates rests in such decisions not being made. The reasons behind this failure often relate to the existence of a patronage-ridden system of government, where investment and economic decisions are not made solely on economic principles but rather on the imperatives of redistribution and maintaining allegiances for the sake of political control and the maintenance of power. In such situations, the need for stability of a narrow political power base is all-important, overriding the imperative to extend growth and development beyond a tiny elite.

Understanding why things happen and dont happen and why decisions are made or not made in particular ways thus demands an understanding of the incentives that shape these outcomes. Poverty, reminds the Ugandan opposition leader Dr Kizza Besigye,remains a tool of political control in Africa.

Without addressing these aspects, reform efforts inevitably fail to take root, and money flows make only a fleeting difference. This explains why, for example, money is spent on new facilities at border posts, which lack the necessary institutional systems and policies for the smooth passage of trade, or why roads are built but lack a maintenance structure. This also explains why money is spent on the trappings of presidential convoys and expensive overseas travel while education and health systems fail. That is what happens when policies are geared towards preserving elite interests at the expense of the majority.

Changing the incentive structure that ensures reform and development is, as Ezekwesili observes, not a technical process, but a political one. There are clear and established guidelines for best practice on aid derived from years of experience and many examples of success and failure both inside and outside Africa. If donors ignore these and try to reinvent the wheel, they can do considerably more harm than good.

The threads of best practice presented here illustrate that the goals and plans of donors, for one, should match the complex on-the-ground realities, rather than attempt to meet the political needs of external players or other higher theories and ideals. Experience teaches us that donors should be patient, too, since the period of recovery and reform in states is at least as long as the period of decline. Outsiders must guard against employing metrics of expenditure and focus instead on the assessment of impact.

Sometimes doing nothing is actually a choice and thus amounts to doing something.

Donors need to be guided by local needs because local ownership is imperative. From that springs responsibility for process, policy and outcomes. While locals will seldom say no to foreign assistance, misalignment of international and internal intentions can only lead to friction, disappointment and, ultimately, failure. The devil of development lies in the delivery of the detail, while local realities need to be calculated according to strengths, not hopes. Messianic zeal should be guarded against, as should the tautology of assistance and consultants, just as the antipathy of donors towards the private sector is ultimately self-defeating to a thesis of growth, development and stability. After all, countries get rich and more stable, and their people more satisfied, when they make things (or services) and sell them.

The answers to how outsiders can play a more constructive role lie in African experiences and beyond, in Latin America, the Middle East and East, South and Central Asia. They illustrate the power of policy choice, and of agency, over geography and history. The value of these answers relies on understanding the problems not only from the perspective of the donor but also that of the recipient.

* * *

Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime. This saying, overused to the point of clich, has become an article of faith to donors. Many still ignore its message, however, preferring acts of charitable giving and benevolence, preferably with their label on the side. But people want to be enabled, not just fed. Charity should thus not centre on the wealthy giving money or goodies to the poor. That is too easy and, perhaps unwittingly, only reinforces the intrinsic power relationship. Development is about the transfer of more finite and valuable resources: time, expertise and means. Herein lies the rub: this form of empowerment is necessarily long term and demands engagement in understanding (and attempting to change) the incentive structure that hinders development in the first instance.

Whatever the area of aid expenditure humanitarian, governance, military, development the overall intention should be the same: to try to reach the point where aid is no longer necessary. Recognising the tautology of aid is a key step, as is how to find the means to spend it better. This requires removing spending and the metrics of effectiveness from the realm of the subjective, in which personalities, personal relationships and strategic donor preferences play a disproportionate role in deciding where the money is spent, to one where more objective criteria can be applied.

Aid agencies, ambassadors and recipients are seldom invested in changing the system. Current incentives are geared to making the best job possible of a terrible situation, where the metrics often favour spending rather than saying no. There is also always a good reason to spend money, with little reward in walking away, no matter how obviously limited the chances of success. And anyway, there are reasons for giving aid other than development, as the Ugandan example illustrates.

Yet, Africa faces formidable challenges over the next generation, driven by a huge increase in population numbers. Even before Covid-19, most African countries were struggling to lift economic growth to levels that could provide opportunities for a large increase in the number of young people. Rather than promoting the sort of governance regimes that have enabled East Asias transformation, for example, donors have not only struggled to disrupt these patterns of policy and leadership, but, in some instances, they have simply reinforced bad practices.

The following chapters explain the scale and scope of aid today, the nature of advisory services that increasingly lend structure to the business of aid, and the differences between delivering military and other forms of assistance in developing a model of best or at least better practice. The book also looks at the reasons behind the success of the Marshall Plan concept, asking if it can be repeated today. In identifying key drivers behind Africas development trajectory, it concludes with advice for both donors and recipients on getting more out of the current aid environment.

Whether aid can be a great disruptor in promoting Africas rapid development is the key question posed in this volume. Answering this relies on identifying and understanding lessons from within and without the continent, lessons which, I hope, have relevance beyond Africa. The answer to whether aid can be better used for development rests on taking a longer strategic approach with regard to people, institutions and process. DM

Expensive Poverty: Why Aid Fails and How It Can Work by Greg Mills is available at the Daily Maverick shop.

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Mankind finally discovers aliens and they’re onboard the International Space Station – Daily Star

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Aliens have been found aboard the International Space Station.

Scientists have discovered three new genetic variants of bacteria inside the manned spacecraft which orbits the Earth 15 times-a-day 250 miles high.

The microorganisms were found at separate locations including a special plant growth chamber where researchers have been attempting to cultivate crops in zero gravity conditions.

The three strains of Methylobacteriaceae - which are "rod-shaped and capable of movement" - were "previously undiscovered", according to a NASA study published in science journal Frontiers In Microbiology.

Researchers think they could help with the eventual colonisation of Mars as their characteristics include helping vegetation grow.

The discovery has been deemed so important that boffins now want to expand the station to include a new biology lab to collect, process and analyse microbes in space without having to ship them back to Earth.

Scientists have been surveying the craft - launched in 1998, run by five international space agencies and manned by inter-changing crews of seven astronauts - for the presence of microorganisms for at least six years.

NASA scientists Dr Nitin Kumar Singh and Dr Kasthuri Venkateswaran said the newly-found strains might be a game-changer for the future of space crops.

They said it was essential to find new bacteria that assist in plant growth under stressful conditions in extreme places with scarce resources.

The discoveries make a case to expand the space station to `mitigate the lengthy process of continuously sending samples back to Earth, according to science news website Universal-Sci.com.

"Rather than returning samples back to Earth for examinations an integrated microbial monitoring system that collects, processes, and analyses samples on location, in space, using molecular technologies would vastly expedite the process, the website states.

"Researchers think these three newly discovered strains might be useful in helping vegetation grow on Mars because Methylobacterium species are known to promote plant growth," it continues.

"It will be a challenge to nurture and grow plants when we finally start a colony on the Red Planet."

The discovery of the new bacteria "might make things a little easier", it concludes.

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Partner Therapeutics Announces Contract with US Department of Defense for Advanced Development of Leukine to Treat Sulfur Mustard Gas (HD) Exposure -…

Posted: at 8:14 am

LEXINGTON, Mass., Feb. 17, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Partner Therapeutics, Inc. (PTx)today announced a milestone-based Other Transaction Agreement (OTA) with the United States Department of Defense (DoD) to fund development and regulatory activities to support an sBLA of Leukine (sargramostim, rhu-Granulocyte Macrophage Colony Stimulating Factor, "GM-CSF") for the treatment of sulfur mustard gas (HD) exposure under the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) "Animal Rule" (21 CFR 314.600-650). The funding includes a base agreement of $5 million, with optional periods that may be exercised to support research and regulatory initiatives. Funding is provided through the DoD's Joint Program Executive Office for Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear Defense (JPEO-CBRND). There are currently no medical countermeasures (MCMs) approved by the FDA to treat myelosuppressive effects of HD exposure.

"We are grateful to the DoD's JPEO-CBRND for supporting advanced development of Leukine in HD exposure," said John McManus, Chief Business Officer of Partner Therapeutics, Inc. "Data from Leukine's use in approved indications and data generated to support Leukine's approval for acute radiation syndrome support the hypothesis that administering Leukine after HD exposure could lead to accelerated recovery of immune function and improved outcomes. We look forward to working with the JPEO-CBRND and continuing to expand the utility of Leukine as an MCM in areas of interest to the United States Government."

This collaboration represents PTx's second partnership with the JPEO-CBRND to expand the utility of Leukine as an MCM beyond its current approved use to treat myelosuppressive effects of acute radiation exposure. The JPEO-CBRND previously awarded $39.5 million to support development of Leukine as a therapeutic to enhance immune response in high-risk non-hospitalized patients with COVID-19 and to improve oxygenation and lung function in hospitalized COVID-19 patients receiving oxygen support. Leukine achieved the primary endpoint (improvement in oxygenation) in the hospitalized patient study (iLeukPulm) and results from a 600-patient placebo-controlled study in high-risk non-hospitalized patients (SCOPE) are expected in the next quarter.

"Working with PTx will help advance our fight against HD exposure," said Col. Ryan Eckmeier, the JPEO-CBRND's Joint Project Manager for Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear (CBRN) Medical. "Investing in repurposing the broad-spectrum immune modulator Leukine will support our core mission of protecting our nation's warfighters from CBRN threats."

Leukine is FDA-approved for the treatment of acute radiation syndrome (ARS) and is held by the U.S. Government for national preparedness. Leukine is not approved for treatment of sulfur mustard exposure.

About Sulfur Mustard Gas Exposure

Victims of HD exposure experience bone marrow suppression leading to myelosuppression and pancytopenia.1-5 HD acts at different sites in the body as a radio-mimetic with symptoms including headache, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, epigastric pain, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, and anemia.4-11 Mortality in victims of HD exposure in World War I, World War II and the Iran-Iraq conflict were associated with lymphopenia, leukopenia and septicemia, pointing to the need for an HD MCM that can accelerate recovery of lymphocytes, other white blood cell lineages and platelets, restore immune homeostasis and barrier integrity, and effectively modulate and improve leukocyte function and antimicrobial immunity of the systemic immune system.4-14

ABOUT LEUKINELEUKINE(sargramostim) is a yeast-derived recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (rhuGM-CSF).

Leukine is indicated:

Important Safety Information for Leukine (sargramostim)

Contraindications

Warnings and Precautions

Adverse Reactions

Adverse events occurring in greater than 10 percent of patients receiving LEUKINE in controlled clinical trials and reported in a higher frequency than placebo are:

ABOUT PARTNER THERAPEUTICSPTx, an integrated biotechnology company, focuses on development and commercialization of late-stage therapeutics to improve health outcomes in treatment of cancer and other serious diseases. The company believes in delivering products and supporting medical teams with the purpose of achieving superior outcomes for patients and their families. Visit http://www.partnertx.com

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Hemp, Inc. Reports: Industrial Hemp Farming Projects Could Tap Into $1 Billion in Grants – GlobeNewswire

Posted: at 8:14 am

Las Vegas, NV, Feb. 15, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- viaNewMediaWire --The wonder crop is in the spotlight again during the USDA Secretarys recent tour of Lincoln Universitys Dickinson Research Facility. Hemp, Inc. (OTC PINK: HEMP),one of the global leaders on the forefront of the industrial hemp industry, reports todaythat hemps role in sustainable agriculture has garnered the attention of USDA Secretary, Tom Vilsack, as he recently announced that $1 billion in grants will be offered by the federal government to support climate-friendly farming when he toured the facility that studies agriculture. According to the newssource, grants under this program are intended to engage agriculture, forestry and rural communities in the nations fight against climate change and bolster sustainable agriculture.

Whats more climate-friendly than hemp? Environmentalists believe this wonder crop has the potential to make huge strides in the regenerative agriculture movement. Lets take a look at why they believe that and how industrial hemp farming projects could see some of that $1 billion in grant money.

First, hemp can improve soil health. It can be cultivated in almost any environment across the country regardless of the climate and generate high yields with a short 120-day harvest cycle (ideal for crop rotation). As a cover crop, hemp restores degraded soil by blocking out the room for weeds reducing the need for synthetic herbicides and adding diversity to crop rotations. After harvest, hemp leaves behind biomass that can be up-cycled into added-value products or returned to the soil, feeding essential nutrients back into the ground. (Source)

Second, hemp supports bioremediation. Bioremediation is when you use living things to heal and cleanse soil after years of toxic build-up. Hemp has a deep root structure and guards against weeds, naturally preparing the soil for rotation. One can liken hemps root structure to a vacuum cleaner accumulating heavy metals and other toxins from the soil before it enters surrounding groundwater. (Source)

Third, hemp grows faster than trees and can sequester large quantities of carbon dioxide back into the ground. Hemp is a zero-carbon energy source with applications in biofuel. In fact, scientists estimate that for every ton of hemp cultivated, 1.63 tons of CO2 is removed from the atmosphere. (Source)

Overall, hemp, as the industry continues to mature, has the power to lower the ecological impacts of food, fuel and fiber production, empower small-scale farmers and create jobs in a variety of industries. But while we praise this wonder crop, we have to remember a total hemp-based economy doesnt automatically equate to a greener future. Yes, the industry is maturing but its up to the farmers to ensure that its grown in a way that heals the land, not destroy it like conventional commodity crops which erodes soil and externalizes pollution.

TheClimate 21 Project(the funding program thats part of a broader initiative) under the Biden administration outlines the steps the USDA can take to encourage farmers, ranchers and landowners to take up practices that scientists believe can help reduce atmospheric carbon. It taps the expertise of more than 150 experts with high-level government experience to deliver actionable advice for a rapid-start, whole-of-government climate response coordinated by the White House and accountable to President Biden.

Hemp projects that may be eligible to receive some of the $1 billion funding must demonstrate climate-smart production practices, activities and systems on working lands; verify the carbon and greenhouse-gas benefits associated with those practices; and work to develop markets and promote their climate-smart commodities.The grants are available to local, county, tribal and state governments, small businesses and for-profit organizations, nonprofits and universities. Applications are being accepted for projects between $5 million to $100 million through April 8th but the deadline for pilot projects up to $250,000 is May 27th.

For more information on grant specifics, the USDA is hosting a webinar on Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities on Wednesday, February 16, 2022 from 11:00am to 1:00pm EST. According to the website, this webinar will focus on the details of the funding opportunity and recordings will be available after the event. Clickhereandherefor more detailed information.

Already positioned as a go-to consultant in the industry, Hemp, Inc. can be great resource to hemp farmers and manufacturers all over the United States. With the industrial hemp market growing exponentially, resources and contacts are invaluable. The industrial hemp market is expected to reach $12.01 billion by 2028 and is expected to expand at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 16.2% from 2021 to 2028, per the most recent study byGrand View Research, Inc.

Hemp, Inc.s first product in its line ofCBDA and CBGA products is set to be released soon. Hemp, Inc.s sales & marketing team is currently working on large-scale orders for the companys CBDA and CBGA products. Those interested is distributing on a large-scale basis should emailsales@hempinc.comor call877-436-7564for more information. The entire product line will include water, tinctures, gummies, capsules, and edibles and will come in a variety of sizes, potencies, flavors and formulas that executives foresee being in high demand.

The currentKing of Hemp (R)product lineincludes:King of Hemp Gummies - These CBD edibles come in a variety of flavors and potencies of 25 gm, 20 gm and 10 gm. Flavors include blue raspberry, kiwi, strawberry, pineapple, guava, tropical, apple, citrus, berry tang and more. CBDFruit Rings(20 gm and 10 gm) are available in apple, peach and watermelon. King of HempSour Bearsin assorted flavors (10 gm) are in stock, too.

King of Hemp Caviar(previously called Moon Rocks)offers high CBD potency and a rich taste. The Caviar is made from high-quality Bubba Kush hemp flower, coated in a THC-free distillate and then rolled in CBG-rich kief. While Caviar can be smoked in a pipe or vaped, it should not be rolled into a cigarette.

King of Hemp Diamonds contain over 95% CBD and are derived from terpene-infused THC-free distillate. Diamonds are consumed by dabbing.

The robustly flavoredKing of Hemp Pre-Rolls are made from organic, pesticide-free Bubba Kush hemp wrapped in RAW Natural Rolling Paper. The unique wrapper is made from 100% plants with no added chalk or dyes. Pre-Rolls are sold online as singles and in a six-pack.

Fortified Pre-Rolls utilize theKing of Hemp Pre-Roll and cover it with a high-CBD distillate and hemp CBG kief. These highly potent, flavorful pre-rolls are recommended for experienced smokers.

Midnight Express, a high CBG Pre-Roll, is made from premium hemp flowers, named in honor of the 1977 book by Billy Hayes Midnight Express, which was also an award-winning feature film, written by Oliver Stone.Hemp, Inc. uses a proprietary process for its Pre-Rolls, which includes blending the best flower from numerous hemp crops.King of Hemp Pre-Rolls offer smokers a unique, consistent profile every time.

King of Hemp Tinctures are currently sold out, but new-formulated tinctures with CBDA and CBGA will be available at the King of Hemp online store and at retail locations in a few weeks.

With more than 10 years of experience in growing and processing hemp in North America,Hemp, Inc.has an established network of industry professionals in every segment of the industrial hemp industry. Hemp, Inc. has thelargest industrial multipurpose hemp processing facilityin North America, an 85,000-square foot facility in Spring Hope, N.C.Its mission of providing green solutions that help make the world a better place continues to flourish as the company advances an ever-growing portfolio of revenue- and value-generating synergistic businesses.Hemp may be the salvation in retooling America for greener, more sustainable domestic manufacturing.Vilsack was quoted during a tour of the Universitys Dickinson Research Facility, which studies agriculture, The hemp project is really interesting because it has so many different potential opportunities. He went on to say, Industrial hemp is just a tremendous crop the fact that you can have building material, you can have clothing and a variety of other things is pretty interesting.

HEMP, INC.S LAS VEGAS FACILITYIn addition to Hemp, Inc.s 85,000-square foot facility in Spring Hope, NC, the Company also has a 10,000-square foot research and development/manufacturing facility located in Las Vegas, Nevada home of some of the biggest named trade shows and conventions in the United States.Easily accessible in the heart of the valley, this facility researches, formulates, develops and produces the Companys line of products and stays abreast of the industrys scientific data and findings. Those interested in Hemp, Inc.s King of Hempproducts or those who require more information can visitwww.KingofHempUSA.com; emailsales@kingofhempusa.com; or, call 877-436-7564.

HEMP, INC.S RECENT ACQUISITIONSHemp, Inc. had its second major acquisition in less than three months. In the all-stock transaction, Hemp, Inc. acquired full ownership of American Sustainable Rubber Company, LLC (ASR). This specific acquisition will enable Hemp, Inc. to leverage ASRs proprietary intellectual property to improve its hemp grows and harvesting. The first acquisition was acquiringFerris Holding, Inc., a leading co-packer and manufacturer based in Las Vegas, Nevada. To read more on how these strategic acquisitions are positioning the Company forlong-term profitable growth, clickhere.

WHAT IS HEMP, INC.?

With a deep-rooted social and environmental mission at its core,Hemp, Inc.seeksto build a business constituency for the American small hemp farmer, the American veteran, and other groups experiencing the ever-increasing disparity between tapering income and soaring expenses. The Company is on a mission to be a powerful engine for social change and economic revival, worldwide, by providing hemp products that are eco-friendly, sustainable and healthy. Hemp, Inc. executives believe there can be tangible benefits reaped from adhering to a corporate social responsibility plan.

FORWARD-LOOKING DISCLAIMER AND DISCLOSURES

This press release may contain certain forward-looking statements and information, as defined within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and is subject to the Safe Harbor created by those sections. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requires issuers to provide adequate current information. Financials for Hemp, Inc. are listed on the OTC Exchange.More information can also be found out the Hemp, Inc. website by visitingwww.hempinc.com/hemp-financial-disclosures/. Material contains statements about expected future events and/or financial results that are forward-looking in nature and subject to risks and uncertainties. Such forward-looking statements involve risks, uncertainties.

Contact:

Hemp, Inc.

Investor Relations: 855-436-7688

Sales:877-436-7564

ir@hempinc.com

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Huhtamki Oyj : It is not enough that we manufacture recyclable products we have to improve actual recycling as well – marketscreener.com

Posted: at 8:14 am

"Innovation and value chain collaboration are key when driving systemic change towards circularity," says Tanja Virtanen-Lepp, Head of Sustainability Center of Excellence at Huhtamaki. "As the world's resources are limited, focusing on our part of the value chain is not enough when protecting food, people and the planet."

At Huhtamaki we see waste as a valuable secondary resource. Today, all packaging does not find its way to collection and sorting after being used to protect the product. These gaps explain why packaging is not actually recycled even when it is recyclable by composition.

In addition, we believe that collaboration can make a real difference. It is important that solutions are not one-size-fits-all but are scalable and appropriate to local conditions. To create tangible impact, we aim to find best possible value chain partners to work with.

Moreover, we use circular economy as a guiding principle when designing sustainable packaging solutions. We pay close attention to material and structure choices, help develop waste collection infrastructure and guide people in how to correctly dispose of our food packaging materials to minimize environmental impact and use of resources.

In 2021, we raised the bar across the board for our activities and elevated our sustainability ambitions via a broad approach covering the pillars of sustainability: environmental protection, social accountability and governance and ethics.

In 2022, we will continue to work with several partners to develop recycling pilots that are scalable. This way we ensure that not only are our products recyclable, but that we enable packaging waste as a resource by transforming end-of-life products into secondary raw materials, and improve packaging recycling rates. Our commitment is to support the UN Global Compact and the UN Sustainable Development Goals and to achieve carbon neutrality in our production and science-based targets by 2030.

Huhtamaki's 2021 Annual Report, to be published on March 1, 2022, contains more information on sustainability as a cornerstone of our strategy.

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Coffee and Eczema: Does it Cause or Reduce Flares? – Healthline

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Eczema is an inflammatory skin condition associated with dry skin, scaly patches, blisters, and rashes. Though treatment and skin care routines can help, you may have also tried different lifestyle adjustments, like dietary changes, to help prevent or reduce the severity of flares.

You may have heard people suggest that drinking coffee can trigger eczema flares, whereas topically applied caffeine may help improve symptoms.

You also may have heard some people talk about the benefits of caffeine for atopic dermatitis, the most common form of eczema, according to the National Eczema Association (NEA).

Though data is limited, this article reviews what is known about the relationship between coffee, caffeine, and eczema.

There is very limited evidence to suggest that your morning coffee habit may cause your eczema symptoms to flare or get worse.

A study from 2003 noted coffee as one of the foods that can trigger eczema, though this research is older and more studies on the topic are needed to confirm this conclusion.

Its also easy to find anecdotal stories online of people who experienced changing eczema symptoms when eliminating coffee from their diets.

Still, organizations such as the NEA do not specifically list coffee as a known trigger food or an item to exclude or include in a diet.

Lets consider the reasons why coffee could play a role in causing inflammation.

Mycotoxins, as the name implies, are toxic chemicals found in mold. The toxins can cause potential health concerns, such as kidney damage or increased cancer risk, at high levels.

According to a 2013 study, several other studies have shown that coffee beans contain traceable amounts of mycotoxins. This means you consume these toxins with every cup of coffee you drink.

In recent years, some people have used this information to promote the idea that drinking coffee is bad for eczema and in general because of the negative health implications of drinking mycotoxins.

Despite these claims, it is important to note that people consume safe levels of mycotoxins in several different foods throughout their day, according to 2008 research from Japan. Plus, your liver will filter out the small amounts of toxins so that you should feel no ill effects from drinking coffee.

Some people have pointed out that drinking coffee can trigger your adrenal gland to release cortisol, also known as the stress hormone. Some research from 2017 supports the idea that coffee can increase a persons stress level.

Stress is a known trigger of eczema flares. This means it is possible that if coffee raises your stress level, it may trigger a flare.

However, as the researchers pointed out, the study was small in size and several factors, including your body size and metabolism rate, can affect how coffee affects your stress levels.

In other words, coffee may have a negative impact for some people yet cause no reactions in others.

If you experience worsening symptoms or frequent flares, you may want to try eliminating coffee from your diet. That said, the research linking coffee to eczema flares is limited, so removing coffee from your diet may not have any effect on your symptoms.

Limited research supports the use of coffee to help with inflammation. Studies that do exist tend to look specifically at the role of caffeine, independent of coffee.

For example, in a 2019 review of studies, researchers looked at the role of caffeine for the treatment of atopic dermatitis (a form of eczema) and psoriasis. Their results indicated that caffeine can help reduce inflammation, which can help eczema symptoms improve.

However, it is unclear if the people receiving treatment applied the caffeine topically or ingested it. The researchers also did not directly note the use of coffee or examination of coffees effects.

Caffeine may be an effective form of treatment for eczema. Researchers have shown evidence dating back several decades that topically applied caffeine along with hydrocortisone can help reduce eczema symptoms.

A 2019 review of studies also noted that caffeine can have a positive effect on treating eczema.

However, it is unclear if a person will gain the benefits only from topical application of caffeine or if consuming it directly through coffee or other sources would also work. Ultimately, more research needs to be done on this topic.

Limited evidence suggests that topical creams or ointments that contain caffeine may help with improving eczema symptoms. However, it is not clear if consuming caffeine, such as from coffee, will have any effect on your symptoms.

The research on how coffee may impact eczema is very limited. While anecdotal stories are widely available, very little scientific study supports either the risks or benefits of coffee on eczema symptoms.

Some research indicates that caffeine, at least when applied topically, can help improve eczema symptoms. It is not clear if consuming it in coffee or from other sources will have the same effect.

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My skin began to swell and ooze so much I woke up stuck to my pillowcase now my BONES itch… – The Sun

Posted: at 8:14 am

A WOMAN has been ravaged by a severe skin condition that leaves her oozing face stuck to the pillowcase.

Sedi Khumalo said her skin is so itchy that it feels like I need to scratch down to my bones.

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The 28-year-old, from Worsley, Greater Manchester, says she's in constant pain after quitting oral steroids which helped treat her eczema.

She suffers with a condition known as topical steroid withdrawal (TSW), when the skin becomes worse after stopping medication.

TSW has had a devastating effect on Sedis mental health and even triggered thoughts of ending her own life.

Sedi claims she was on medication for over seven years and initially thought the pills were a miracle treatment as they cleared her eczema.

But she found that they made the condition worse over time. The flare-ups became more severe the more she took steroids.

The bank worker decided to go cold turkey on the creams and pills in October 2020.

She was stunned as she noticed her skin began to swell, crack and ooze as a result of the skin desperately needing the medication.

Sedi said: "Although this might look like eczema, it's not and it's important that people know that.

"Its addiction to prescription drugs and my body became so dependent on them and now it is learning to heal itself.

"I'm still trying to get my head around the condition.

"TSW gives me what is known as a 'bone itch' - my nerves are damaged from the steroids and when I'm itchy it can't be relieved and it feels like I need to scratch down to my bones."

At times, the only relief was a scalding hot bath or shower which isn't good for your skin either.

Sedi said she keeps going back to her GP who tries to treat her for eczema.

She said: "I was told by the GP it was severe eczema but I knew in myself it wasn't - I was quite scared because I thought my health in general was deteriorating.

They didn't realise the thing they were using to treat me was making me ill - it was really frustrating."

The National Eczema Association says that TSW is a serious potential side effect of topical steroid use that is not readily recognized by patients and providers.

Much is unknown about TSW, including how many people are affected and how much steroid medication use triggers it.

But it is clear that it occurs mostly with long-term use of the drugs, for example in people who have used creams to keep their eczema at bay since childhood.

Whilst her skin is in recovery mode, Sedi said that she couldn't leave her own home and the condition had a financial and severe mental impact on her daily life.

She added: "Since I've been in withdrawal, I've had panic attacks and experienced depression which I used to take antidepressants for.

"I wanted to end my own life and had to call the Samaritans to try to get help to manage the situation.

"It got so bad that I had to drop out of my studies and stop my part time job which had a financial impact.

"TSW can also mess with your hormones and cause insomnia - I was waking up several times in the night but I had no idea why. "

Now, Sedi is feeling slightly better and wants to raise awareness about TSW as she believes it is not a topic that is discussed enough.

She said: "Some people go through TSW for years - my body is healing from a steroid addiction and it needs to figure out how to heal itself again."

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My skin began to swell and ooze so much I woke up stuck to my pillowcase now my BONES itch... - The Sun

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Do these 2 things to tame dry skin in winter – UCHealth Today

Posted: at 8:13 am

Dry skin is a problem year-round in Colorados arid climate, but in the wintery months, people especially feel the effects of lack of moisture. Photo: Getty Images.

Dry skin. Its a year-round problem in Colorado that, unfortunately, ratchets up even more in the dry, winter months.

A combination of factors in Colorado such as wind, low humidity, and high altitude can deplete skin of moisture, causing it to feel dry and itchy and also look dry and weathered. Additionally, with cold weather comes indoor heating, which causes dry skin in winter.

Turning on the heat circulates more dry air, which can be a skin irritant, explains Dr. Cory A. Dunnick, a dermatologist at UCHealth Dermatology Clinic Anschutz Medical Campus and professor of dermatology at the University of Colorado Department of Dermatology.

Dry skin can itch, turn red, flake, crack, and even bleed. Fortunately, there are ways to combat dry skin. Dr. Dunnick says the two main strategies are less soap and more moisturizer. Soaps are drying and moisturizers are hydrating. Here, she shares more ways to improve the way your skin looks and feels this winter.

Its not a bad idea to change your normal skin care routine in the winter. If you usually use a moisturizing lotion for your face and body, consider using a cream or ointment. Lotions are high in water content and the easiest formulation to rub into the skin but are less moisturizing than thicker creams. Ointments are oil-based and are the most moisturizing, says Dunnick. Look for products that contain:

Dunnick also recommends using a mild cleanser, especially for older adults. When youre young, a strong cleanser can help fight the acne that often accompanies puberty and the excess oil production that comes with it. However, as you age, you gradually produce less oil.

Older individuals need to revert to milder skin care products and dont need to use soap all over only in the smelly areas and can rinse with water in the shower, says Dunnick.

And dont skip the sunscreen. Just because its cold does not mean the sun is not strong.

In general, Dunnick says, the fewer the ingredients, the better. This advice goes for skin care products as well as laundry detergents and fabric softeners. For example, she recommends avoiding products with harsh preservatives, fragrances, or dyes.

If anti-aging products such as retinol and alpha-hydroxy acid (AHA) are part of your everyday skin care routine, you may want to give them a rest or cut down on how often you use them if you experience excessive dryness, redness, and flakiness. You should also avoid products with alcohol, except hand sanitizer, and limit how often you use an exfoliating scrub or product.

Cold weather and hot showers go together. Theres no need to eliminate that combo but try to shorten or limit your hot showers since hot water depletes the oil in your skin and also dries it out. Then, after your shower, generously apply moisturizer to your body and face immediately after drying off. This helps trap the moisture in your skin.

If youre fortunate enough to have access to a hot tub, the same advice goes for that hot water exposure. But, first, rinse off after soaking to wash away the chemicals that keep the hot tub water clean but can dry and irritate your skin.

Another way to generate heat in the cold weather is to light a fire. Unfortunately, the heat from a fire also tends to dry out the skin. Warm up with fleece and hot cocoa or tea instead. To combat the dry air caused by indoor heating, use a humidifier to add humidity to the air.

Did we mention that you should use a moisturizer? In addition to regularly applying moisturizer to your body, be sure to do the same for your hands and lips, two areas that often get chapped and irritated in the winter. These days, with all the handwashing and alcohol-based sanitizers people are doing to protect themselves from COVID-19, dry hands are especially problematic.

To prevent or alleviate excess dryness in your hand, be sure to wash your hands with lukewarm water and a mild cleanser, when possible, and apply moisturizer frequently. As for your lips, Dunnick recommends wearing a lip balm with SPF when outdoors. And contrary to what you may have heard, drinking water does not help relieve dry skin.

Increasing water intake does not improve skin hydration, says Dunnick. Instead, moisturize and use less soap.

While a moisturizer can help treat most cases of dry skin, it cant treat all dry skin. Your dry, itchy skin may be the result of a skin condition such as eczema or an underlying health condition such as kidney disease or hypothyroidism. Eczema is a common skin condition, affecting more than 31 million Americans. Symptoms include dry, itchy, inflamed, and cracked skin.

While moisturizer may relieve some eczema symptoms, eczema is a chronic skin condition that requires a treatment plan and possibly prescription medication. If home-care remedies fail to relieve dry skin after two weeks, make an appointment with a dermatologist.

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Do these 2 things to tame dry skin in winter - UCHealth Today

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Burns with emollients – The BMJ

Posted: at 8:13 am

Advise patients to continue using emollients but to be aware of burn risks, avoid naked flames, and stop smoking

Emollients are not flammable themselves but, when impregnated into fabric, can act as an accelerant

People most at risk are those with reduced ability to react quickly when emollient impregnated fabric is exposed to naked flames

A 72 year old man with poor mobility, Parkinsons disease, and dementia attends the emergency department with upper body burns. He is a smoker and his carer applies emollients to most of his body daily as long term maintenance treatment for eczema. The attending clinician established that the patients burns were sustained when his cigarette came into contact with the right arm of his pyjamas, which quickly caught fire.

Emollients are an important treatment and generally safe; they are not flammable in themselves, in their container, or on the skin. However, awareness of fire riskfrom fabric that has become impregnated with emollient residueis low.123

Emollient can transfer from skin onto clothing, furniture, and bedding, which accumulates over timeeven with regular washing, some residue remains. A naked flame is needed for ignition. The residue acts as an accelerant, increasing the speed of ignition and intensity of a fire, reducing the time available to extinguish it.

Emollients are moisturising treatments used for dry skin conditions such as atopic eczema and psoriasis. Formulations include lotions, creams, gels, ointments, and sprays; and broadly are petroleum (paraffin) or non-petroleum based.

They are applied directly to the skin, typically

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Slugging Could Be the Secret to Healing Dry Winter Skin – ConsumerReports.org

Posted: at 8:13 am

I grew up convinced that any moisturizer not labeled oil free would clog the hell out of my pores; thankfully, if the slugging trend on TikTok is any indication, kids these days are not afraid of a little moisture in their skincare.

And they shouldnt be! For a long time people thought petrolatum was comedogenicthat is, it causes skin to clog up, says Michelle Wong, a cosmetic chemist and science educator based in Sydney, Australia. This was based on some studies on rabbit ears, where scientists applied petrolatum to them and counted clogged pores. But the study was faulty, she says: Rabbit ears are more sensitive than human skin and have larger pores that appeared clogged to the researchers. But the damage was done. This was eventually corrected in the mid-90s, when petrolatum was tested on human skin and found not to clog pores. But by then petrolatums reputation for pore-clogging was already established.

There are particular situations in which the heavy occlusivity of petroleum jelly products may do more harm than good. If youre using other especially strong, active skincare products before your moisturizer (for example, a retinoid), petrolatum can seal it inwhich in theory sounds like a great idea, but for folks with sensitive skin, the increased contact between your skin and the active ingredient can cause irritation. This irritation, says Wong, can lead to breakouts. So in a roundabout way, petrolatum can sometimes end up clogging pores, even if it isnt comedogenic on its own, she says.

You also definitely dont want to slug if you have any skin infections, says Boull. If you have impetigo, other bacterial infections of the skin, fungal infections of the skinthose would be times when you would want to steer clear of petrolatum, just until that infection got treated, she says. I asked her if that meant I shouldnt use it on the poison ivy I for some reason get every summer. It certainly wouldnt do much good, but it wouldnt hurt, either, she says, provided that I had thoroughly cleaned it before application. In that situation, she says, I should probably stick with a topical steroid for best results.

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Slugging Could Be the Secret to Healing Dry Winter Skin - ConsumerReports.org

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